PRODUCTS

MADE WITH LOVE BY EXPERTS

PROCESSING SERVICES

MAXIMIZE YOUR HARVEST

Retailers

Is your recreational marijuana retail store looking for the very highest quality infused products? Do your customers demand the most discerning flavors, the purest concentrates, and the freshest resins? Our marijuana processing is the finest in class.

We want to hear from you! Give us a call or an email, or use the contact field below. We’ll set you up with the products you need, and we’ll listen to your feedback so we can grow together and provide your customers with the experience they want.

Cultivators

Do you produce the stickiest, gnarliest, stinkiest buds in town? Do you have material, fresh or dried, that you’d like to see concentrated into the very image of the plant it was grown from?

We want to hear from you! Give us a call or an email, or use the contact field below. We’ll work with you to get you the concentrate products you’ll be proud of, whether they’re shatter, wax, live resin or edibles. We have a number of ways of accepting payment, and we’ll get your product out the door in a timely manner, whichever form it may take.

At Cannabis Maximus, our aim is to push your cannabis experience to the limit. We love what we do, and we aim to deliver the absolute finest quality in all of our products. This means making concentrates that fully embody the character of the plant they came from, from the effects to the scents and flavors. When it came down to selecting the base solvent to create our extracts, we took a look at all of the options, their benefits and their drawbacks. At first, CO2 seemed like a very viable choice. CO2 is something humans create by simply breathing, so how harmful could it be if residuals were to remain in an extract?

Unfortunately, the choice was not so simple. Residual solvent may not be a big issue, but CO2 requires very high pressures to act as a solvent. This, coupled with the low amount of cannabinoids a given volume of CO2 can dissolve increases the ecological impact of recycling the solvent, in that more energy is required to reuse it. In addition, the very high pressures involved affect what substances CO2 dissolves – in a single pass, the operator can choose to dissolve THC and other cannabinoids, or they can dissolve monoterpenes and other flavor compounds, but not both at once. This means that for a complete, flavorful extract, at least two extractions have to happen, and the products are recombined in the end. For us, this was too artificial of a process.

Another option is Ethanol. Ethanol, the same alcohol we enjoy in beverages, has a great ability to dissolve active cannabis components. It’s also food safe, and the toxicity of ethanol is arguable (technically toxic, but we drink the stuff for fun!). However, it also has a great ability to dissolve other, undesirable components like chlorophyll if exposed for too long or at too high of temperatures. In order for the solvent to be removed from the extract, we have to apply heat and vacuum, and at this stage is where ethanol falls apart. The boiling point of ethanol is, compared to butane and CO2, much closer to the boiling points of many compounds we want to remain in the extract – the monoterpenes. This means we have to get the extract warmer, under higher vacuum, or for longer periods of time to remove the solvent. Unfortunately this carries many of those wonderful terps away.

Finally we arrive at light hydrocarbon solvents – Butane and Propane. Other related chemicals such as Pentane, Hexane and Heptane have boiling points too high to be useful to us. Butane in particular has enjoyed a poor reputation on the internet, primarily from the obvious dangers when used by unqualified personnel. Since the recent discovery by unscrupulous people that shooting a can of lighter grade butane through some herbs would produce a golden, clear, flavorful extract, entrepreneurs have set their houses on fire, and consumers have been exposed to the dangers of using products not intended for food use. Butane produced for lighters can contain traces of other hydrocarbons, some very harmful. “Mystery Oil,” benzene and mercaptans are all found in lighter butane to varying extent.

At Cannabis Maximus, we use instrument grade butane and propane. We don’t leave your safety in our suppliers hands, however – we filter this in house before it ever touches cannabis, and we reuse as much as possible to keep things ecologically sound. Butane and Propane by themselves are very stable chemicals – they are saturated alkanes, which lack any chemical “handles” by which to interact with other chemicals. This makes them very good for extraction, in that when we expose cannabinoids and terpenes to butane, they are not chemically altered by the solvent. These hydrocarbons, when coupled with our temperature controlled extraction processes, concentrate all the parts of the plant we love, while keeping out chlorophyll, plant waxes and other lipids. Our laboratory is at the cutting edge of extraction technology, and was built from the ground up, collaborating with professional engineers and industrial hygiene considerations that separate us from the rest. We carefully remove residual solvents from the extract once finished, surpassing the standards called for by the state of Colorado, and all of our extracts are tested for purity, residual solvents, and any contaminants before they make it to a store’s shelf. This process creates a sensual photograph of the plants we extract, which we hope you will enjoy as much as we enjoy creating it!